And now I have come to a part of my
story that I would much rather not write. Always
my inclination if left alone is to sit in the sun and
sing of things like crocuses, of nothing less fresh
and clean than crocuses. The engaging sprightliness
of crocuses; their dear little smell, not to be smelled
except by the privileged few; their luminous transparency I
am thinking of the white and the purple; their kind
way of not keeping hearts sick for Spring waiting longer
than they can just bear; how pleasant to sit with
a friend in the sun, a friend who like myself likes
to babble of green fields, and talk together about
all things flowery. But Priscilla’s story
has taken such a hold on me, it seemed when first
I heard it to be so full of lessons, that I feel bound
to set it down from beginning to end for the use and
warning of all persons, princesses and others, who
think that by searching, by going far afield, they
will find happiness, and do not see that it is lying
all the while at their feet. They do not see it
because it is so close. It is so close that there
is a danger of its being trodden on or kicked away.
And it is shy, and waits to be picked up. Priscilla,
we know, went very far afield in search of hers, and
having undertaken to tell of what befell her I must
not now, only because I would rather, suppress any
portion of the story. Besides, it is a portion
vital to the catastrophe.
In Minehead, then, there lived at
this time a murderer. He had not been found out
yet and he was not a murderer by profession, for he
was a bricklayer; but in his heart he was, and that
is just as bad. He had had a varied career into
the details of which I do not propose to go, had come
three or four years before to live in the West of England
because it was so far from all the other places he
had lived in, had got work in Minehead, settled there
respectably, married, and was a friend of that carrier
who brought the bread and other parcels every day
to the Symford store. At this time he was in money
difficulties and his wife, of whom he was fond, was
in an expensive state of health. The accounts
of Priscilla’s generosity and wealth had reached
Minehead as I said some time ago, and had got even
into the local papers. The carrier was the chief
transmitter of news, for he saw Mrs. Vickerton every
day and she was a woman who loved to talk; but those
of the Shuttleworth servants who were often in Minehead
on divers errands ratified and added to all he said,
and embellished the tale besides with what was to
them the most interesting part, the unmistakable signs
their Augustus showed of intending to marry the young
woman. This did not interest the murderer.
Sir Augustus and the lady he meant to marry were outside
his sphere altogether; too well protected, too powerful.
What he liked to hear about was the money Priscilla
had scattered among the cottagers, how much each woman
had got, whether it had been spent or not, whether
she had a husband, or grown-up children; and best
of all he liked to hear about the money Mrs. Jones
had got. All the village, and therefore Mrs. Vickerton
and the carrier, knew of it, knew even the exact spot
beneath the bolster where it was kept, knew it was
kept there for safety from the depredations of the
vicar’s wife, knew the vicar’s wife had
taken away Priscilla’s first present. The
carrier knew too of Mrs. Jones’s age, her weakness,
her nearness to death. He remarked that such a
sum wasn’t of much use to an old woman certain
to die in a few days, and that it might just as well
not be hers at all for all the spending it got.
The murderer, whose reputation in Minehead was so immaculate
that not a single fly had ever dared blow on it, said
kindly that no doubt just to have it in her possession
was cheering and that one should not grudge the old
their little bits of comfort; and he walked over to
Symford that night, and getting there about one o’clock
murdered Mrs. Jones. I will not enter into details.
I believe it was quite simple. He was back by
six next morning with the five pounds in his pocket,
and his wife that day had meat for dinner.
That is all I shall say about the
murderer, except that he was never found out; and
nothing shall induce me to dwell upon the murder.
But what about the effect it had on Priscilla?
Well, it absolutely crushed her.
The day before, after Mrs. Morrison’s
visit, she had been wretched enough, spending most
of it walking very fast, as driven spirits do, with
Fritzing for miles across the bleak and blowy moor,
by turns contrite and rebellious, one moment ready
to admit she was a miserable sinner, the next indignantly
repudiating Mrs. Morrison’s and her own conscience’s
accusations, her soul much beaten and bent by winds
of misgiving but still on its feet, still defiant,
still sheltering itself when it could behind plain
common sense which whispered at intervals that all
that had happened was only bad luck. They walked
miles that day; often in silence, sometimes in gusty
talk talk gusty with the swift changes
of Priscilla’s mood scudding across the leaden
background of Fritzing’s steadier despair and
they got back tired, hungry, their clothes splashed
with mud, their minds no nearer light than when they
started. She had, I say, been wretched enough;
but what was this wretchedness to that which followed?
In her ignorance she thought it the worst day she
had ever had, the most tormented; and when she went
to bed she sought comfort in its very badness by telling
herself that it was over and could never come again.
It could not. But Time is prolific of surprises;
and on Saturday morning Symford woke with a shudder
to the murder of Mrs. Jones.
Now such a thing as this had not happened
in that part of Somersetshire within the memory of
living man, and though Symford shuddered it was also
proud and pleased. The mixed feeling of horror,
pleasure, and pride was a thrilling one. It felt
itself at once raised to a position of lurid conspicuousness
in the county, its name would be in every mouth, the
papers, perhaps even the London papers, would talk
about it. At all times, in spite of the care and
guidance it had had from the clergy and gentry, the
account of a murder gave Symford more pure pleasure
than any other form of entertainment; and now here
was one, not at second-hand, not to be viewed through
the cooling medium of print and pictures, but in its
midst, before its eyes, at its very doors. Mrs.
Jones went up strangely in its estimation. The
general feeling was that it was an honour to have known
her. Nobody worked that day. The school
was deserted. Dinners were not cooked. Babies
shrieked uncomforted. All Symford was gathered
in groups outside Mrs. Jones’s cottage, and
as the day wore on and the news spread, visitors from
the neighbouring villages, from Minehead and from
Ullerton, arrived with sandwiches and swelled them.
Priscilla saw these groups from her
windows. The fatal cottage was at the foot of
the hill in full view both of her bedroom and her parlour.
Only by sitting in the bathroom would she be able to
get away from it. When the news was brought her,
breathlessly, pallidly, by Annalise in the early morning
with her hot water, she refused to believe it.
Annalise knew no English and must have got hold of
a horrible wrong tale. The old lady was dead
no doubt, had died quietly in her sleep as had been
expected, but what folly was all this about a murder?
Yet she sat up in bed and felt rather cold as she
looked at Annalise, for Annalise was very pallid.
And then at last she had to believe it. Annalise
had had it told her from beginning to end, with the
help of signs, by the charwoman. She had learned
more English in those few crimson minutes than in
the whole of the time she had been in England.
The charwoman had begun her demonstration by slowly
drawing her finger across her throat from one ear
to the other, and Annalise repeated the action for
Priscilla’s clearer comprehension. How Priscilla
got up that day and dressed she never knew. Once
at least during the process she stumbled back on to
the bed and lay with her face on her arms, shaken
by a most desperate weeping. That fatal charity;
those fatal five-pound notes. Annalise, panic-stricken
lest she who possessed so many should be the next
victim, poured out the tale of the missing money,
of the plain motive for the murder, with a convincingness,
a naked truth, that stabbed Priscilla to the heart
with each clinching word.
“They say the old woman must
have cried out must have been awakened,
or the man would have taken the money without
“Oh don’t oh leave me ”
moaned Priscilla.
She did not go downstairs that day.
Every time Annalise tried to come in she sent her
away. When she was talked to of food, she felt
sick. Once she began to pace about the room,
but the sight of those eager black knots of people
down the street, of policemen and other important
and official-looking persons going in and out of the
cottage, drove her back to her bed and its sheltering,
world-deadening pillow. Indeed the waters of
life had gone over her head and swallowed her up in
hopeless blackness. She acknowledged herself wrong.
She gave in utterly. Every word Mrs. Morrison a
dreadful woman, yet dreadful as she was still a thousand
times better than herself every word she
had said, every one of those bitter words at which
she had been so indignant the morning before, was
true, was justified. That day Priscilla tore
the last shreds of self-satisfaction from her soul
and sat staring at it with horrified eyes as at a
thing wholly repulsive, dangerous, blighting.
What was to become of her, and of poor Fritzing, dragged
down by her to an equal misery? About one o’clock
she heard Mrs. Morrison’s voice below, in altercation
apparently with him. At this time she was crying
again; bitter, burning tears; those scorching tears
that follow in the wake of destroyed illusions, that
drop, hot and withering, on to the fragments of what
was once the guiding glory of an ideal. She was
brought so low, was so humbled, so uncertain of herself,
that she felt it would bring her peace if she might
go down to Mrs. Morrison and acknowledge all her vileness;
tell her how wrong she had been, ask her forgiveness
for her rudeness, beg her for pity, for help, for
counsel. She needed some kind older woman, oh
she needed some kind older woman to hold out cool
hands of wisdom and show her the way. But then
she would have to make a complete confession of everything
she had done, and how would Mrs. Morrison or any other
decent woman look upon her flight from her father’s
home? Would they not turn away shuddering from
what she now saw was a hideous selfishness and ingratitude?
The altercation going on below rose rapidly in heat.
Just at the end it grew so heated that even through
the pillow Priscilla could hear its flaming conclusion.
“Man, I tell you your niece
is to all intents and purposes a murderess, a double
murderess,” cried Mrs. Morrison. “Not
only has she the woman’s murder to answer for,
but the ruined soul of the murderer as well.”
Upon which there was a loud shout
of “Hence! Hence!” and a great slamming
of the street door.
For some time after this Priscilla
heard fevered walking about in her parlour and sounds
as of many and muffled imprecations; then, when they
had grown a little more intermittent, careful footsteps
came up her stairs, footsteps so careful, so determined
not to disturb, that the stairs cracked and wheezed
more than they had ever yet been known to do.
Arrived at the top they paused outside her door, and
Priscilla, checking her sobs, could hear how Fritzing
stood there wrestling with his body’s determination
to breathe too loud. He stood there listening
for what seemed to her an eternity. She almost
screamed at last as the minutes passed and she knew
he was still there, motionless, listening. After
a long while he went away again with the same anxious
care to make no noise, and she, with a movement of
utter abandonment to woe, turned over and cried herself
sick.
Till evening she lay there alone,
and then the steps came up again, accompanied this
time by the tinkle of china and spoons. Priscilla
was sitting at the window looking on to the churchyard,
staring into the dark with its swaying branches and
few faint stars, and when she heard him outside the
door listening again in anxious silence she got up
and opened it.
Fritzing held a plate of food in one
hand and a glass of milk in the other. The expression
on his face was absurdly like that of a mother yearning
over a sick child. “Mein liebes Kind mein
liebes Kind,” he stammered when she came
out, so woebegone, so crushed, so utterly unlike any
Priscilla of any one of her moods that he had ever
seen before. Her eyes were red, her eyelids heavy
with tears, her face was pinched and narrower, the
corners of her mouth had a most piteous droop, her
very hair, pushed back off her forehead, seemed sad,
and hung in spiritless masses about her neck and ears.
“Mein liebes Kind,” stammered poor
Fritzing; and his hand shook so that he upset some
of the milk.
Priscilla leaned against the door-post.
She was feeling sick and giddy. “How dreadful
this is,” she murmured, looking at him with
weary, woeful eyes.
“No, no all will
be well,” said Fritzing, striving to be brisk.
“Drink some milk, ma’am.”
“Oh, I have been wicked.”
“Wicked?”
Fritzing hastily put the plate and
glass down on the floor, and catching up the hand
hanging limply by her side passionately kissed it.
“You are the noblest woman on earth,” he
said.
“Oh,” said Priscilla,
turning away her head and shutting her eyes for very
weariness of such futile phrases.
“Ma’am, you are.
I would swear it. But you are also a child, and
so you are ready at the first reverse to suppose you
have done with happiness for ever. Who knows,”
said Fritzing with a great show of bright belief in
his own prophecy, the while his heart was a stone,
“who knows but what you are now on the very threshold
of it?”
“Oh,” murmured Priscilla,
too beaten to do anything but droop her head.
“It is insisting on the commonplace
to remind you, ma’am, that the darkest hour
comes before dawn. Yet it is a well-known natural
phenomenon.”
Priscilla leaned her head against
the door-post. She stood there motionless, her
hands hanging by her side, her eyes shut, her mouth
slightly open, the very picture of one who has given
up.
“Drink some milk, ma’am. At least
endeavour to.”
She took no heed of him.
“For God’s sake, ma’am,
do not approach these slight misadventures in so tragic
a spirit. You have done nothing wrong whatever.
I know you accuse yourself. It is madness to
do so. I, who have so often scolded you, who
have never spared the lash of my tongue when in past
years I saw fair reason to apply it, I tell you now
with the same reliable candour that your actions in
this village and the motives that prompted them have
been in each single case of a stainless nobility.”
She took no heed of him.
He stooped down and picked up the
glass. “Drink some milk, ma’am.
A few mouthfuls, perhaps even one, will help to clear
the muddied vision of your mind. I cannot understand,”
he went on, half despairing, half exasperated, “what
reasons you can possibly have for refusing to drink
some milk. It is a feat most easily accomplished.”
She did not move.
“Do you perchance imagine that
a starved and badly treated body can ever harbour
that most precious gift of the gods, a clear, sane
mind?”
She did not move.
He looked at her in silence for a
moment, then put down the glass. “This
is all my fault,” he said slowly. “The
whole responsibility for this unhappiness is on my
shoulders, and I frankly confess it is a burden so
grievous that I know not how to bear it.”
He paused, but she took no notice.
“Ma’am, I have loved you.”
She took no notice.
“And the property of love, I
have observed, is often to mangle and kill the soul
of its object.”
She might have been asleep.
“Ma’am, I have brought
you to a sorry pass. I was old, and you were
young. I experienced, you ignorant. I deliberate,
you impulsive. I a man, you a woman. Instead
of restraining you, guiding you, shielding you from
yourself, I was most vile, and fired you with desires
for freedom that under the peculiar circumstances
were wicked, set a ball rolling that I might have
foreseen could never afterwards be stopped, put thoughts
into your head that never without me would have entered
it, embarked you on an enterprise in which the happiness
of your whole life was doomed to shipwreck.”
She stirred a little, and sighed a faint protest.
“This is very terrible to me of
a crushing, killing weight. Let it not also have
to be said that I mangled your very soul, dimmed your
reason, impaired the sweet sanity, the nice adjustment
of what I know was once a fair and balanced mind.”
She raised her head slowly and looked
at him. “What?” she said. “Do
you think do you think I’m going mad?”
“I think it very likely, ma’am,”
said Fritzing with conviction.
A startled expression crept into her eyes.
“So much morbid introspection,”
he went on, “followed by hours of weeping and
fasting, if indulged in long enough will certainly
have that result. A person who fasts a sufficient
length of time invariably parts piecemeal with valuable
portions of his wits.”
She stretched out her hand.
He mistook the action and bent down and kissed it.
“No,” said Priscilla, “I want the
milk.”
He snatched it up and gave it to her,
watching her drink with all the relief, the thankfulness
of a mother whose child’s sickness takes a turn
for the better. When she had finished she gave
him back the glass. “Fritzi,” she
said, looking at him with eyes wide open now and dark
with anxious questioning, “we won’t reproach
ourselves then if we can help it
“Certainly not, ma’am a most
futile thing to do.”
“I’ll try to believe what
you say about me, if you promise to believe what I
say about you.”
“Ma’am, I’ll believe anything if
only you will be reasonable.”
“You’ve been everything
to me that’s what I want to say.
Always, ever since I can remember.”
“And you, ma’am? What have you not
been to me?”
“And there’s nothing, nothing you can
blame yourself for.”
“Ma’am
“You’ve been too good, too unselfish,
and I’ve dragged you down.”
“Ma’am
“Well, we won’t begin
again. But tell me one thing and tell
me the truth oh Fritzi tell me the truth
as you value your soul do you anywhere
see the least light on our future? Do you anywhere
see even a bit, a smallest bit of hope?”
He took her hand again and kissed
it; then lifted his head and looked at her very solemnly.
“No, ma’am,” he said with the decision
of an unshakable conviction, “upon my immortal
soul I do not see a shred.”